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Mexican Mustang Liniment
is just the thing fur Harness and Saddle Sores on horses,
Try Mexican Mustang Liniment
for Lumbago,
Lame Back,
Rheumatism,
Stiff Joints, etc.,
and you will find that you never in
all your life used anything that so
successfully fought aches and pains. .
To £et the full benefit you should
rub it in most thoroughly.
• t
Mexican Mustang Liniment
is a positive cure for Roup or Swelled Head in poultry.
Seasons and Styles.
Come and go but the appetite remains the same.
Fine Steaks and Roasts^
Are as necessary and as much wanted this season as last and
we are still in the market to supply these wants. We will take your
orders by phone, or otherwise, and deliver promptly. Our meats,
fish and oysters are always fresh and first-class.
P. F. fIATTHEWS & SON
P. S. J. W. Stocks is with us and solicits the patronage of his
friends.
Insurance,
Fire Accident-
CALL ON
Otis A. Murphey,
And protect yoursef against Fire and Accidents.
ah easy Proposition.
Mr. J. S. Cattanach, the veteran
veterinary, a Scot by birth, enjoys
transatlantic travel and is the life
of the social hall on the big, slow
steamships which he most affects.
On a recent passage he offered this
proposition:
Five young men went to a club
house to play.
They had $5 among them.
They played five hours.
They had various refreshments.
When they came out, each one
had $5.
After several circuits of the prom
enade deck Dr. Cattanach put his
head in the door and remarked,
“They were musicians.” —Xew York
Times. *
A Marvelous Watch.
One of the most wonderful watch
es in the world is that owned and
made by Major Dopping-Hepenstal
of the royal engineers. It is a com
paratively small watch, not much
bigger than an ordinary lever, but
it performs a variety of services in.
addition to telling the time. It rings
an alarm bell in the morning to
wake its owner, then it proceeds to
light a spirit lamp and boil a kettle
of water and finally pours the boil
ing water into a small teapot. The
Prince of Wales witnessed the won
derful performances of this watch
and partook of a cup of tea which
it made for his royal highness. —
London Answers.
Bad Form.
Bunker —I made a horrible break
on the links yesterday. My caddie
made me very angry, and I yelled,
“Get out!” at him.
B. Ginner—But surely that’s ex
cusable, isn’t it?
Bunker—Oh, bless you, no! I
should have said, “Hoot awa’!”—
Philadelphia Press.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat*
A Remarkable Blind Man.
Dennis A. Reardon is Boston’s
most remarkable blind man. He
has been sightless for thirty years,
but he is a successful architect and
buys all the goods for the Perkins
institute. Mr. Reardon is the ar
chitect of fifteen completed build
ings designed foT the Perkins insti
tute. By passing his fingers over
the tracing paper he is able to feel
the lines, so sensitive is his touch,
and he can tell whether the idea has
been carried out as he intended.
Mr. Reardon carries a watcli with
out a crystal and is never at a loss i
to know the time.
I
__lll ■!■■■■ I 111 111 ■■■ II
Thousands Have Kidney Trouble
and Don’t Know it.
How To Find Out.
Fill a bottle or common glass with your
water and let it stand twenty-four hours; a
% sediment or set-
J'/-SJT* £=lj tling Indicates an
unhealthy condi
rrm u tlon
\vA \ HTSiZy ' ly heys; if it stains
I y° ur f‘ nen it is
evidence of kid
jjyH \| j fij ney trouble; too
frequent desire to
' Ji' pass it or pain in
~ •• <£?-——— t h e back is also
convincing proof that the kidneys and blad
der are out of order.
What to Do.
There is comfort In the knowledge so
often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-
Root, the great kidney remedy fulfills every
wish in curing rheumatism, pain in the
back, kidneys, liver, bladder and every hart
of the urinary passage. It corrects inability
to hold water and scalding pain in passing
it, or bad effects following use of liquor,
wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant
necessity of being compelled to go often
during the day, and to get up many times
during the night. The mild and the extra
ordinary effect of Swamp-Root ts soon
realized. It stands the highest for its won
derful cures of the most distressing cases.
If you need a medicine you should have the
best. Sold by druggists insoc. andsl. sizes.
You may have a sample bottle of this
wonderful discovery f’-tT'x u
and a book that tells
more about It, both sent BgjfrTgl-i £
absolutely free by mail,
address Dr. Kilmer & nom* nt s*mp.Roo.
Cos., Binghamton, N. Y. When writing men
tion reading this generous offer In this paper. .
THE BARNESVILLE NEWS-GAZETTE, THI *DAY, NOVEMBER 13, 19Q
American Sympathy.
The American people were dis
interested in their sympathy for
the Boers while the recent war was
in progress and will continue to
feel an interest in their fate,
now that the Boer generals are
coming to ask help for the Boer
widows and orphans. The fact that
they failed in their struggle with a
stronger power, does not cause
them to forfeit their claim upon
their friends in this country, but
rather strengthens it. “I can
assure you,” says General Bothl*
in a letter to a Chicago sympathi
zer, “that if during the war it was
necessary to render us assistance,
there are now much stronger reas
on for doing so to help our people
on their legs again.” The sum of
$15,000,000 first given by the
British goverment to help the
Boers start life again, is iusuffi
cent, even when supplemented re
cently by an additional $10,000,-
000, to meet the needs of the suffer
ers from the war. The Boer people
are in a position resembling that
of the South at the close of the
Civil War, when all accumulated
wealth had been swept away and
little more than bare acres were
’left, says the Baltimore American.
Areas of the Boer country have
have been burned over, as were
those of the Valley of Virginia by
Sheridan and those of Georgia and
South Carolina by Sherman. The
Transvaal has its Columbia, and
returning Boer prisoners of war,
like the Confderate veterans, find
their homes in ruins. The $25,-
000,000 supplied by the British
goverment, even when supple
mented by goverment loans t 6 the
farmers at 4 per cent., is but a
drop in the bucket when compar
ed with the present need of the
Boers.—Ex.
STEPPED AGAINST A HOT STOVE.
A child of Mrs. Geo. T. Betfson, when
getting liis usual Saturday night bath,
Stepped back against a hot stove which
burned him severely. The child was
in great agony and his mother could do
nothing to pacify him. Remembering
that she had a bottle of Chamberlin’s
Pain Balm in the house, she thought
she would try it. In less than half an
hour after applying it the child was
quiet and asleep, and in less than two
weeks was well. Mrs. Benson is a well
known resident of Keller, Va. Pain
Balm is an antiseptic liniment and es
pecially valuable for burns, cuts,bruis
es and sprains. For sale by J. H.
Blackburn.
Pins.
“There’s a pin on the sidewalk,”
said the statistician, “but don’t
bother to pick it up, for 8,000,000,-
000 new ones will be made this year,
and what’s one pin among so many?
The pin,” he went on, “is an inter
esting subject. It is older than civ
ilization, and 3,000 years 3go it was
made in more beautiful form than it
is today. Then only the wealthy
could afford pins, but now we can
all use them. This is because they
are made by such an ingenious and
intelligent machine. Into its mouth
a coil of wire flows, and out of the
other end comes the pin completed
save for its plating and polishing.
The plating is a mere matter of a
bath, the polishing a mere matter of
a dry shampoo in a barrel of revolv
ing sawdust. Even the packing of
the pins in papers is machine work.
This year there are close upon fifty
pin factories running busily in
America, and their sales will aggre
gate about $3,250,000.” —Philadel-
phia Record.
General or Nothing.
Stories of the adventures of the
Boer generals in England are multi
plying. One of them is vouched for
by a correspondent of the London
Daily Yews and would lend anew
point to the old phrase aut Diabo
lus, aut null us. It is to the effect
that when Mr. Chamberlain and
General De Wet were introduced the
colonial secretary addressed the
Boer general as “Mr. De Wet.”
“General,” corrected De Wet. Mr.
Chamberlain repeated the “Mr.,”
whereupon De Wet remarked stern
ly, “General or nothing!” And the
colonial secretary had to follow the
example of Lord Kitchener and rec
ognize the military status of De
Wet before the übiquitous one
would shake hands.
CURED OF PILES AFTER 40 YEARS
Mr. C. H. Haney, of Geneva, Ohio, had
the piles for forty years. Doctors and
dollars could do him no lasting good.
DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve cured him
permanently. Invaluable for cuts,
burns, brtises, sprains, lacerations,
eczema, tetter, gait rheum, and all
other skin diseases. Look for the name
De Witt on the package all others are
cheap, worthless counterfeits.
Jxo. H. Blackburn.
Barnesville, Ga.
L. Holmes,
Milner, Ga.
h hard worker.
—
‘Trr ate” John Alien, who repre
sented i Mississippi district in con
gress ft r several years, but who was
left at, lome two years ago by con
stituent who thought he was not
serious! ei lough to be a successful
legislatr, was in Washington re
cently |>n business connected with
the St.iLouia exposition. While in
ccngre® Joh|t':J(llen was known as
“the trlf of the house.” During his
hmSHt visit to he was din
[/JlßwHkl SQlSft:; friends at a ilown
towA-htfll.- The hour was late, and
tile ■byersation dragged. “Private”
flwning. Finally he
oth arms and with a
long d/rawn yawn said, “Well, gen
[;||en*ep, I must go to my hotel and
Igo toned, for I have some hard
ilqPlb do in the morning.”
HHHHwing Mr. Allen’s aversion to
any kind, one of the party
“Why, John, what work have you
to do in the morning ?”
“Oh,” drawled the Mississippian,
“I have to get up.”
Prize Money Going A-begging.
There is about $15,000 in the
United States treasury as prize and
bounty money for sailors who took
part in the Manila and Santiago
battles. Every penny of prize and
bounty money that the courts de
cided was due to officers of the fleets
of Dewey and Sampson has been
distributed. In speaking of this
matter Auditor Brown of the navy
said it is undoubtedly due to the
fact that the sailors do not know
that the money is ready for them.
Many of the tars in the two naval
engagements were of foreign birth
and knew nothing of the system of
dividing prize money and bounties.
They have since been transferred to
other ships. Some have died and
others have gone out of the service
and into other trades.
Tariff Freaks.
A German gentleman returning
from southwest Africa brought with
him a tiny monkey, weighing about
two pounds. From Tanga to Genoa
the animal was conveyed gratis.
Thence to the Swiss frontier Is. 3d.
was charged on it as “a bird.” The
St. Gothard railway officials, how
ever, viewed it as “a dog” and
charged 7 shillings, while on the
Eastern Swiss -railway it became a
mere “package” liable to eightpence.
Through Baden and Wurttcmberg
the animal was passed free, but at
Stuttgart it again became “a dog”
and cost another Is. sd.
A single perfumery factory at
Cannes uses 800,000 pounds of
flower petals in a year.
Teething powders and nursing
bottles are now imported into the
province of Kwang-si.
Spoons are in existence which
were used in Egypt in the seven
teenth century B. C.
Proverbs
“ When the butter won’t
come put a penny in the
churn,’’ is an old time dairy
proverb. It often seems to
work though no one has ever
told. why.
When mothers are worried
because the children do not
gain strength and flesh we
say give them Scott’s Emul
sion.
It is like the penny in the
milk because it works and
because there is something
astonishing about it.
Scott’s Emulsion is simply
a milk of pure cod liver oil
with some hypophosphites
especially prepared for delicate
stomachs.
Children take to it naturally
because they like the taste
and the remedy takes just as
naturally to the children be
cause it is so perfectly adapted
to their wants.
For all weak and pale and
thin children Scott’s Emulsion
is the most satisfactory treat
ment.
the Penny, i. t., a
l&jfjir sample free.
sure that thi* picture in
ioriu a * " n Gie
wrapper of every bottle of
JjfUr SCOTT & BOWNE,
IJbs®s**i** 409 Pearl St., N. Y.
soc. and >I.OO ; all druggists.
mm —m ay. : f lUi'wi.iwiiwii 1 *
AV'cgetable Prcparatioufor As
similating live Food andßcgula
ling the Stomachs and Bowels of
Promotes Digest ion. Cheerfu
lness and Rest .Contains neither
Opium. Morphine nor Mineral.
Not "Narc otic .
n rifle ofOUDrSAMUELPtTCmR
PtmtfJim Seed '
dtxSmno '
Mocked* SmUt -
Anise Sord -
Hirm Seed -
Chwi/ud 'fdMr
Mttrrynoit framn
A perfect Remedy for Constipa
tion , Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
ness and Loss OF SLEEP.
Facsimile Signature of
NEW VOTIK.
rCTiioE IBMCS
|
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
GEORGIA,
y
PERFECT PASSENGER
AND SUPERB
SLOPING-CAR SERVICE
BETWEEN
ALL PRINCIPAL POINTS
IN THE
Southeast
Connecting at
SAVANNAH with
STEAMSHIP LINES
. PLYING BETWEEN
Savannah and
New York,
Boston,
Philadelphia,
Baltimore
AND ALL POINTS
NORTH AND EAST
Complete information, rates,
schedules of trains and
sailing dates of steamers
cheerfully furnished by
nny agent of the company.
THEO. D. KLINE, W. A. WINBURN,
Ganeral Bup’t, Traffic Managar,
J. O. HAILE, General Paet’r Agent,
S. J. ROBINSON, Aee't General Paaa’r Agent,
SAVANNAH. QA.
I nearthed 500 llattlesnakew.
The resurvey of the old Portage
Railway near Altoona, Pa., is
causing no end of disturbance
among the reptiles and wild beast.
Several days ago, laborers clearing
out a cutting for leveling, un
earthed a colony of .000 rattle
snakes among the fallen rocks.
Half the reptiles were slain by
the party. Yesterday a level man
disconcerted his aim while sight
ing, when a full grown deer ran in
front of his instrument. Half an
hour later a man far down the
slope dropped his instrument and
ran when a mother bear and tw'o
cubs came up in friendly sort of
way to see what was going on.
All sorts of wild game is abund
ant along the line of the old road.
OASTORIA.
Br* th /f The Kind You Hate Always Doaght
agf
TORIfI
For Infants and Children*.
The Kind You Have
Always Bough?
Bears the i t
Signature f Am
(\ Jp* In
ft/* Use
1/ For Over
Thirty Years
mu
THI OINTAUH COMPANY, NEW VON* OITV.
Troubled The Wrong Man.
At a certain military post just
after “taps” one night a detail
was called for from one of the
companies to bring from the mar
ried quarters to the guard house
one of the men who was beating
and abusing his wife, says the
New York Times. The first ser
geant called for Cbrpl. Walters
and privates Spicer and Carney to
form the detail. The first two
immediately rose from their cots
and prepared for duty, but Carney
was apparently asleep, although
but a minute ago he bad been
swapping yarns with his “bunkie.”
The sergeant ordered Spicer to
wake him when Carney got to his
feet with the disgusted protest:
“Why don’t you wake someone
who isn’t asleep?”
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat*
This preparation contains all of tbt
digestants and digests all kinds of
food. Jtglves instant relief and never
falls to cure. It allows you to eat all
the foex* you want. The most sensitive
Btornaci s can lake it. By its use many
thousands of dyspeptics have been
cured after everything else failed. It
prevents formation of gas on the stom
ach, relieving all distress after eating.
Dieting unnecessary. Pleasant to take.
It can’t help
but do you good
E.CJ. I>E W itt & Cos., Ohlrag®
|l. bottle contain* 2% times tba 50c. size.
I Perfect and Peerless
Rheumatism
and all Liver, Kidney and Blad
der troubles caused by uric acid
in the system. It cures by
cleansing and vitalizing the
blood, thus removing the cause
of disease. It gives vigor and
tone and builds up the health
and strength of the patient
while using the remedy,
URICSOL i3 a luminary In
the medical world. It ha3 cured
and will continue to cure more
of the above diseases than all
other known remedies, many of
which d© more harm than good.
ThisgTeat and thoroughly tested
and endorsed California Remedy
t never disappoints. It cures in-
I fallibly if taken as directed.
Try it and be convinced that
it is a wonder and a blessing to
su.Terinthumanity.
Price SI.OO per bottle, or 6 bot
tles for $5. For sale by druggists. I
Send stamp for book of partic- I
ulars and wonderful cures. If I
your druggist cannot supply you I
it will be sent, prepaid, upon I
receipt of price. Address: j
URICSOL CHEMICAL CO., L*( Anzek*. CaL
•r tb*
LAMAR a RANKIN DRUd CO.. Atkata, Ok.
UUtrltMtflag A gems.